The Big Picture – 91社区 Bass Fishing Team
by Tegan Ruhl '24
The Big Picture – 91社区 Bass Fishing Team
Although it was originally intended for survival purposes, fishing has become a popular American pastime in the last century. Many students at 91社区 fish for recreation, but some anglers are reeled in to competition at a national level.听听
91社区鈥檚 Bass Fishing Team has lured members in since 2018. The current 29-member team, consisting of 27 men and two women, participates in numerous competitions across the nation from Kentucky Lake to Florida鈥檚 Harris Chain. 听听
Sophomore Lillian Taft, business administration and accounting and professional services major, has had a passion for fishing since the 7th grade when her grandfather introduced her to tournament fishing. 鈥淗e has been a big influence on my fishing and was the one who pushed me to fish in high school,鈥 she said. 鈥淥nce I started fishing, I just never really stopped.鈥听
President of 91社区's fishing team Jordan Krempp, sophomore civil engineering major, grew up on a farm where fishing became a part of his life. He was a freshman in high school when he got his first boat and began competing in tournaments, and he was eager to continue the competition at 91社区. 鈥淚 got in contact with the old president before I came to 91社区 because I was really looking forward to it,鈥 he said. 鈥淟ast year, our old president graduated, and I was the only one willing to take it over. But it鈥檚 been a great time. We have a lot of good people on our team, and we all get closer each tournament just from hanging out.鈥听
Bass fishing is a highly competitive and rapidly growing sport. The team participates in college series tournaments hosted by the Association of Collegiate Anglers. Participants at these tournaments range from 200-400 boats with 2-3 participants on each boat. Sponsorship companies award prizes and contingencies to the top 10-20 teams in the regular tournament, which includes gift cards, fishing gear and fishing related accessories.听听听
In a normal bass fishing tournament, teams can bring in a bag of no more than five fish, but they can bring in less if it鈥檚 all they caught for the day. Whoever has the most weight in their bag wins the tournament. Sometimes, there are other awards in the tournament such as winning a prize for who has the biggest bass.听
Anglers use "fish finders" to catch their game. A fish finder is the boat鈥檚 computer complete with GPS mapping. It includes features that allow anglers to see fish, structure, water depth and temperature. Some of this is detected using sonar navigation, but a higher-resolution version of this is called 鈥淟ive Scope,鈥 which is like an ultrasound. Live Scope lets anglers see the size and location of the fish and even watch them react to the bait.听听听听听
Krempp said the team doesn鈥檛 participate in many tournaments throughout the year since it鈥檚 difficult to travel long distances with multiple boats. The team usually sticks to participating in four tournaments every year: one at Kentucky Lake, Pickwick Lake in northwest Alabama, Lake Hartwell on the South Carolina-Georgia Border and one in Arkansas. 听
鈥淭hey鈥檙e normally way over in California or down in Florida,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e always wanted to go to one of those, but making the trip that far with a boat is pretty expensive.鈥澨听
Aside from the $2000 the University provides, the team is self-funded. The funds they do have go quickly, especially since each tournament costs around $1,400 to attend. The team raises funds through sponsorships to pay for their jerseys and try to reimburse members in some way. 鈥淲e pay a decent amount of fuel and travel expenses, but we can鈥檛 pay for everything,鈥 Krempp said. 鈥淲e do the best we can with sponsorships and other things like fundraisers.鈥听
The trips have some unexpected bumps in the road as well. Taft recalls one overnight trip to Arkansas last year when one of their trailers blew a tire, resulting in her only getting about one hour sleep.听 She and her partner still had an excellent day of fishing the next morning, nonetheless.听听
鈥淢y partner and I placed the best we ever did in a regular tournament,鈥 she said. 鈥淎fter the tournament, we made a pitstop in Memphis, Tennessee, at the Bass Pro Shop Pyramid, which just so happened to be the same day as my birthday.鈥澨
Although being on the team is a big commitment and requires some traveling, members have found the team to be a rewarding and fun experience.听听
鈥淎fter my first tournament, I realized how relaxed everything was and that it was doable with my school,鈥 Taft said. 鈥淭he fishing community is heavily male dominated; however, the guys on the team have made being one of the only [females] when we go away very easy.鈥澨
Regardless of whether they reel in a victory or not, the 91社区 Bass Fishing Team fosters not only a competitive spirit, but a fun environment where members can express their love and passion for the sport 鈥 even if they don鈥檛 compete in tournaments.听听
Kyle Echert, sophomore mechanical engineering major, has yet to compete in a tournament, but he still finds time to connect with the team.听听
鈥淚 mainly just hang out with everyone and fish in my spare time,鈥 he said. 鈥淔ishing has made me good friends and makes me happy.鈥澨
鈥淭he team becomes like a second family,鈥 Taft said. 鈥淪ome of the team members have become people I will continue to stay in contact with even after tournaments have stopped.鈥澨
Taft and Krempp said there鈥檚 more to bass fishing than meets the eye, and most people fail to see that.听听
鈥淭he connections, experiences and problem solving 鈥 being a part of the team is truly something that I believe most people will not experience elsewhere,鈥 Taft said.听
鈥淢e and a couple of other buddies, we all agree that there鈥檚 no other feeling like the morning or the evening that we come in the bay [at a tournament],鈥 Krempp said. 鈥淲hen there鈥檚 250 boats in there, and they鈥檙e all people that are like you. You can drive up, talk to somebody, and they鈥檙e like your best friend.鈥澨